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Title: The contractility and performance of the preterm left ventricle before and after early patent ductus arteriosus occlusion in surfactant-treated lambs. Author: Baylen BG, Ogata H, Oguchi K, Ikegami M, Jacobs H, Jobe A, Emmanouilides GC. Journal: Pediatr Res; 1985 Oct; 19(10):1053-8. PubMed ID: 3840585. Abstract: The influence of left-right ductal shunting on early hemodynamic responses, namely left ventricular performance, contractility, and systemic perfusion was evaluated in nine preterm lambs (120 days gestational age) treated with surfactant. Blood gases were maintained in the physiological range using mechanical ventilation; hemodynamic and blood flow measurements (radionuclide labeled microspheres) were obtained before and after occlusion of the patent ductus arteriosus with a catheter balloon. The mean left-right ductal shunt before occlusion (1.2 h postnatal age) was 59 +/- 11% SD. Left ventricular output was increased in all lambs with PDA (pre: 306 +/- 106 versus post: 155 +/- 31 ml/min/kg; p less than 0.001); effective systemic blood flow and organ blood flows did not change. The left ventricle end-diastolic volume was increased in all and decreased following ductal occlusion (pre: 2.0 +/- 0.4 versus post: 1.5 +/- 0.2 ml/kg; p less than 0.01). Cardiac rate, ejection fraction, and contractility (peak dP/dt) did not change. Right-left ductal shunting was not detected in six similarly treated lambs. Thus, during the 1st h of life the hemodynamic profile of preterm lambs with patent ductus arteriosus was characterized by large magnitude left-right shunt and a "high" cardiac output state sufficient to maintain unchanged systemic perfusion. The increased left ventricle output was accomplished by increasing end-diastolic volume (Frank-Starling mechanism), but left ventricle contractility remained unchanged. We speculate that the preterm left ventricle may be unable to sustain the high level of pump performance and contractility required to compensate for the ductal "steal" of systemic blood flow.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]